Abol Fath Khan Zand | |
---|---|
'Vakil e-Ra'aayaa وكيل الرّعايا (Representative of the People) |
|
Shah of Iran | |
Reign | 1779-1779 |
Predecessor | Mohammad Ali Khan |
Successor | Sadiq Khan Zand |
Born | c. 1755 |
Died | 1787 Zand Palace, Shiraz |
Dynasty | Zand dynasty |
Father | Karim Khan |
Religion | Shia Islam |
Abol Fath Khan Zand (Persian: ابوالفتح خان زند Abul-Fatḥ Khān Zand; 1755/1756 – 1787) was the third Shah of the Zand dynasty, and ruled the Persian Empire from March 6, 1779 until August 22, 1779.
After the death of Karim Khan in 1779, two factions emerged, one supporting Abol Fath, one his younger brother Muhammad Ali Khan. Both were still children, and were pawns in the game of power. Karim Khan's brother Zaki Khan managed to proclaim Muhammad Ali Khan, his own son-in-law, as Shah of the Persian Empire, but soon after, he also made Abol Fath joint ruler of Persia. Both Muhammad Ali and Abol Fath only held nominal power during their reigns, as their uncle was the effective master of the government. As another brother of Karim Khan, Sadiq Khan Zand, had left Shiraz, then the capital, and was gathering an army in Kerman ostensibly in support of Abol Fath Khan, Zaki Khan even had Abol Fath imprisoned.
To add to the political trouble, right after the death of Karim Khan, the Qajar prince Agha Muhammad Khan, who had until then been a hostage in Shiraz, in order to prevent an outbreak of war between the Qajars, who still dominated the North of the country, and the Zands, escaped promptly and reached his stronghold of Mazandaran. Subsequently, he took command of his tribe in Astarabad, and declared independence from the Zand Shah. To counter that move, Zaki Khan dispatched the Persian army under the command of his nephew, Ali Murad Khan against the Qajar lord. Soon however, it appeared that Ali Murad Khan had rebelled against him and captured Isfahan. On the other hand, Zaki Khan had levied high taxes on the landlords and put to death and tortured anyone who had resisted. Subsequently his own army rebelled and killed Zaki Khan as he was marching on Isfahan, on June 6, 1779.